| THE BOOK OF CONSTITUTIONS AND ORDINATIONS OF THE ORDER OF PREACHERS (LCO) Ordinations are marked with an asterisk. ( * ) |
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ON THE LIFE OF THE BRETHREN ON THE FOLLOWING OF CHRIST
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| 2. | I. We are reminded by the Rule that the primary reason why we are gathered
together is that we may dwell together in unity, and that there may be in us one
mind and one heart in God. This unity, moreover, achieves its fullness beyond the
limits of a convent in communion with a province and with the whole Order.
II. Rooted in the love of God, the unanimity of our life should provide an example of
the universal reconciliation in Christ, which by word we preach.
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| 3. | I. As in the Church of the Apostles, so also among us communion is founded,
established, and strengthened in the same Spirit in whom we receive the Word
from God the Father with one faith, contemplate with one heart, and praise with
one voice; in whom we who share one bread are made one body, in whom we hold
all things in common and are committed to the same work of evangelization.
II. The brethren should first establish in their own convent the Church of God for
spreading their works in the world: united through obedience, joined in a higher
love through the discipline of chastity, dependent more closely on one another
through poverty.
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| 4. | I. So that each convent may be a fraternal community, everyone should accept and
embrace each other as members of the same body, differing indeed in talent and
work, but equal in the bond of charity and of profession.
II. Conscious of their responsibility toward the common good, the brethren should
readily undertake their duties within the convent and in all their works be glad to
be associated with the others as well as to help those who appear to be
overburdened.
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| * 5. | The brethren should gladly participate in community recreations, in which mutual
understanding and fraternal communion are fostered.
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| 6. | So that apostolic cooperation and fraternal communion may bear more abundant fruit,
the harmonious participation of all the brethren is of great importance, "for a good
which is accepted together is quickly and easily accomplished."(1) Consequently,
conferences shall be held in every convent for promoting the apostolic and regular life.
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| * 7. | I. At least once a month for the furtherance of regular life, under the direction of the
prior or of another brother designated by him, a conference shall be held in which,
on a topic previously determined and opportunely announced, all the brethren can
with sincerity and charity express their mind on those matters which concern the
obligations and duties of the community.
II. In like manner, several times a year a regular chapter shall be held, in which, in a form determined by the conventual chapter, the brethren shall examine their fidelity toward the apostolic mission of the convent and the regular life, and shall undertake some penance. On this occasion the superior can give an exhortation on the spiritual and religious life and opportune admonitions and corrections. III. Brethren who are in the period of basic formation shall have conferences and
chapters under their respective masters, but they can participate fully or partially in
the meetings of the whole community in accord with n. 309,
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| * 8. | Superiors should take special care that the brethren living outside the convent of their
assignment for the sake of the ministry can frequently return to it and be visited by
others. The community should receive them with joy, support them earnestly, and by
encouragement and assistance share in their labors. On the other hand, they should
carry out their ministry as members of the community and readily attend conventual
meetings, so that they may be nourished by others in apostolic zeal and can, in turn,
edify them.
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| 9. | Following the example of St. Dominic, "who was a father and consoler of the sick and
of those who were in distress,"(2) the superior should take special care of the sick, and should employ opportune dispensations for them even when they do not ask. Both he and all the brethren should be diligent in visiting them.
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| * 10. | The older brethren or those in poor health should live in that part of the convent where
they can participate in common life. Proper care should be provided for them, and they
should be able to be visited by relatives and friends.
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| 11. | The superior, either personally or through someone else, having consulted a doctor,
should prudently advise a brother whose illness has become worse so that he can receive
the sacraments in due time.
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| * 12. | Our community life includes with special concern the brethren who suffer distress.
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| * 13. | Trusting in the mercy of God, our love for those who have defected should be shown by kindness and suitable assistance.
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| * 14. | Guests shall be received courteously and treated with kindness and charity.
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| 15. | I. Parents and relatives of the brethren shall be treated with due honor and respect.
II. With gratitude the brethren shall share the prayers and merits of their apostolic
work with benefactors who have helped them from either their spiritual or material
resources to become more proficient in the work of the Gospel.
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| 16. | The brethren should remember faithfully those who have gone before them in the family
of St. Dominic, and who provide them "with example in their way of life, fellowship in
their communion, and the help of their intercession."(3) They should study and make
known their deeds and their teaching. Furthermore, suffrages for the deceased brethren
should not be lacking.
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| 17. | I. From the beginning of the Order, St. Dominic required the brethren to promise him
community and obedience.(4) He himself humbly submitted(5) to the decisions,
especially the laws, which, after full deliberation,(6) the general chapter of the
brethren established. But outside the general chapter, he required kindly(7) but
firmly indeed(8) voluntary obedience(9) from all to the commands which, after due
deliberation,(10) he gave while governing the Order. A community, indeed, to
remain faithful to its spirit and its mission, needs a principle of unity, which it
obtains through obedience.
II. Therefore in our profession only one promise is expressed, namely, of obedience to
the Master of the Order and his successors, according to the laws of the Preachers,
and thus the unity of the Order and of profession, which depends upon the unity of
the head whom all are obliged to obey, is preserved.
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| 18. | I. By this profession in a special manner we imitate Christ who was always subject to
the Father's will for the life of the world, and thus we are united more closely with
the Church, for whose growth, together with the brethren and under the leadership
of superiors representing God in their human ministry, we are dedicated for the
common good of the Church and of the Order.
II. This common good is also made known to us by the religious and apostolic desires of the community and by the interior enlightenment of the Holy Spirit promoting the mission of the Order. III. Our brethren are obliged to obey their superiors in everything that pertains to the
Rule (see n. 275, I) and our laws. We are not obliged to obey, nor indeed can we,
in matters that are contrary to the precepts of God and the Church or contrary to
the laws of the Order or in matters which do not admit of a superior's dispensation;
in doubtful matters, however, we are all obliged to obey.
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| 19. | I. Obedience stands out among the vows related to the evangelical counsels. By this
vow a person dedicates himself totally to God, and its actions are closer to the
purpose of profession, which is the perfection of charity. Through obedience, in
short, everything else which pertains to the apostolic life is accepted at one and the
same time.
II. Since we are united to Christ and the Church by obedience, whatever work and hardship we sustain in its observance can be regarded as a continuation of Christ's own offering and take on an aspect of sacrifice both for ourselves and for the Church in whose perfection the whole work of creation is fulfilled. III. Obedience, by which "we overcome ourselves in our heart,"(11) contributes greatly
to attaining that interior freedom which is characteristic of the sons of God and
disposes us to giving ourselves in charity.
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| 20. | I. While the requirements of the common good bind the brethren to obey, superiors
should hear them readily and take suitable counsel with them, especially in matters
of greater importance, retaining, however, their authority of ordering what is to be
done. Thus the whole community as one body can direct itself towards the
common goal of charity.
II. Since the Holy Spirit guides the Church with special talents and charisms, superiors in the exercise of their authority should carefully observe the special gifts of the brethren and should discern and dispose those gifts for the good of the Church which are stirred up in the Order by the Holy Spirit to meet the needs of the times. Thus, within the limits of the common good and in accord with each one's talent, both in undertaking new works and in continuing those already begun, suitable responsibility should be recognized and freedom allowed to the brethren. III. The superior, seeking God's will and the good of the community and "regarding himself happy in serving in charity rather than in governing with authority,"(12) should promote the free performance of duty, not servile subjection. IV. Responding to their superior in a spirit of faith and of love toward the will of God
and with a sense of fraternal cooperation, the brethren should endeavor sincerely
to understand them, and should actively and considerately carry out what they
have been told to do. In fulfilling their duties, they should strive for obedience that
is prompt and diligent without delay, and simple without useless questioning.
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| 21. | Our entire Order, like all other religious institutes, is subject to the Roman Pontiff as its
highest Superior and obliged to obey him in virtue of the vow of obedience (Can. 590).
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| * 22. | I. Our brethren should not readily have recourse from a lower to higher authority to
escape something imposed by obedience. If they do this, recourse should not be
admitted.
II. If, however, there is reasonable cause for recourse, the brother should obey first,
unless after taking counsel with more experienced persons, chosen with the
consent both of the superior and of the brother concerned, it is established that
grave harm would follow from the act of obedience.
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| * 23. | If for the good of the Order or of the Church it is necessary that a particular mission be
entrusted to a brother by superiors which might involve considerable danger to his life,
this should never be done without consulting him. Then the superior, after making
inquiries and with the advice of prudent brethren, is obliged to proceed with great
caution.
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| * 24. | Neither a prior provincial nor a provincial chapter can exempt any brother completely
from subjection to the local superior.
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| 25. | The brethren promising chastity "for the sake of the kingdom of heaven," should follow
in the footsteps of St. Dominic, who for the love of God preserved unblemished virginity
throughout his life, and was so inflamed with love and zeal for souls that "he received all
men in a broad embrace of charity and since he loved them all, he was loved by all
spending himself fully in the service of his neighbor and in compassion for the
afflicted."(13)
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| 26. | I. We must value the profession of chastity as a special gift of grace, by which we cling to God more easily with an undivided heart, and are more intimately
consecrated to Him. Moreover, imitating the virginal life of Christ, who for love
of the Church gave himself up for her, we are totally dedicated, under the impulse
of our apostolic vocation, to the Church and to a fuller love of mankind. As we
accept paternity in Christ in a broader sense, we become more suitable ministers
for the work of eternal regeneration.
II. By the practice of chastity we gradually attain more effectively purification of heart, liberty of soul, and fervor of charity, and thus greater control of soul and body, and a fuller development of personal integrity by which we can achieve a serene and healthy relationship with all people. III. Furthermore, the chaste life, which the brethren profess, creates an effective
service and distinctive witness of the kingdom of God present even now, and at the
same time it stands as a special sign of the heavenly kingdom to come in which
Christ will present his glorious Church adorned as his bride.
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| 27. | I. Those who aspire to the profession of chastity in the Order should duly recognize
the duties and dignity of marriage which represents the love between Christ and his
Church, and they should understand that by the grace of God they have been called
to a more profound expression of this same love.
II. Since the observance of perfect continence touches intimately the deeper tendencies of human nature and since it is a condition in our Order for productively exercising apostolic ministry, it is necessary that the brethren progressively acquire physical, psychological, and moral maturity. III. In the process of development necessary for establishing chastity more deeply and
strongly, positive training and suitable aids, both human and divine, shall be
provided for the brethren, so that having successfully overcome difficulties and
dangers they may be able to achieve a natural and supernatural integration of their
whole affective life.
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| 28. | I. Our brethren striving to persevere faithfully and to advance persistently in
continence despite crises encountered in the course of a life-time, should in all
circumstances maintain intimate communication with God through a friendly union
with Christ nourished by Sacred Scripture and the mystery of the Eucharist. They
should also be strengthened by filial love and devotion toward the Mother of God,
the Blessed Virgin Mary.
II. Under the continuing influence of the impelling charity of Christ, namely universal divine friendship, they should make themselves all things to all people in their apostolic ministry. In the common life of their religious and apostolic family, to which they are united in a closer bond through chastity, they should also cultivate fraternal love and serene friendship. III. Conscious of their own weakness, the brethren should not take their own strength for granted, but without fear or timidity, they should practice mortification and control of their senses and emotions, and while they should conduct themselves compassionately with everyone, they should reject by a kind of spiritual instinct everything that leads chastity into danger. IV. They should also use opportunely the natural means necessary or helpful for
maintaining health of mind and body.
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| 29. | All the brethren, especially superiors, moved by fraternal communion, should help those
of us who experience difficulties in the matter of chastity with expressions of the
greatest charity; they should do this with sincere benevolence, by prayer, advice, and all
other prudent and helpful means.
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| 30. | Imitating the Apostles, who proclaimed the kingdom of God without gold, silver, or
money, Saint Dominic and his brethren, according to the needs of the apostolate in their
age, determined not to have possessions -- neither income nor money -- and, while they
preached the gospel, to beg daily the bread of the community. This was the apostolic
poverty in the beginning of the Order, and its spirit must also animate us according to
the forms adapted to different times and places.
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| 31. | I. Hearing the Lord say, "Go sell what you have, and give to the poor, and come
follow me,"(14) we have decided to be poor both in fact and in spirit, so that while
we endeavor to convert people to heavenly things and to rescue them from the
domination of wealth, we may be ourselves conquerors of greed by conformity
with Christ, "who for our sake became poor, that by his poverty we might become
rich."(15)
II. This spirit of poverty impels us to store our treasure in the justice of the kingdom
of God, with a living confidence in the Lord. This is freedom from servitude, and
indeed from anxiety about earthly things, so that we may cling to God more
closely, be more readily available to Him, and more boldly speak about Him. This
means for us, therefore, a frugality which unites us more closely with the poor to
be evangelized, but it also means a liberality toward the brethren and our
neighbors, since for the kingdom of God, especially for the needs of study and of
the ministry of salvation, we gladly spend our resources "so that in all the needs of
this life which pass away, that charity may reign which abides forever.(16)
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| 32. | I. In our profession, therefore, we promise God to possess nothing by right of
personal ownership, but to have all things in common and to use them under the
direction of superiors for the common good of the Order and of the Church.
II. Consequently, none of the brethren can retain as his own any goods, either money or income allotted to him in any manner whatsoever, but he must hand over everything to the community. III. But neither should an accumulation of common goods be admitted in the
community itself which does not serve the purpose of the Order or its ministry
since this would oppose the poverty which all, individually and as members of the
community, have professed.
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| 33. | Since poverty imposes on so many people the necessity of strenuous labor for simple
livelihood, our brethren must give a powerful collective witness publicly by working
energetically in their apostolic service, by living sensibly from an often uncertain income,
and by gladly sharing their goods with those less fortunate.
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| * 34. | I. The brethren should beware of collecting novelties or the comforts of life, but in all things and all places they should lead a simple life.
II. In accord with the general norms and the spirit of the Order, provinces can
determine the manner of observing poverty, having studied the circumstances of
time, location, people, and ministries.
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| 35. | Superiors and syndics should so carefully provide from common resources for the true
and reasonable needs of the brethren, that private life may be completely excluded.
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| 36. | Since "everyone ought to be concerned to some extent about the needs of daily life,"(17)
religious poverty demands that all the brethren should be aware of their responsibility for
the economic life of the convent (see nn. 576-577).
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| 37. | Avoiding anything that is superfluous or pretentious, our convents should be simple and suited to their purpose and so planned according to the standards of the place and time that they offend no one.
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| * 38. | I. The brethren can have certain books and different equipment for personal use but
in moderation and according to the determination of a provincial chapter. Those
who have been assigned under obedience to special studies and duties can be given
permission by the prior provincial, after consulting the local superior, to have
books and suitable equipment.
II. When brethren have been assigned to another convent, they can take with them only what the prior provincial allows according to the legitimate customs of the province. |
| 39. | Regular observance, taken by St. Dominic from tradition or created by him, so governs
our way of living that we are aided in our purpose of more closely following Christ and
are able to carry out the apostolic life more effectively. In order, therefore, that we may
remain faithful in our vocation, we should regard regular observance highly, cherish it in
our heart, and strive to put it into effect.
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| 40. | All the elements that constitute and govern Dominican life through common discipline
pertain to regular observance. Outstanding among these elements are the common life,
the celebration of the liturgy and private prayer, the observance of the vows, the
assiduous study of truth, and the apostolic ministry: to fulfill them faithfully we are
helped by the cloister, silence, wearing the habit, and penitential practices.
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| 41. | That the brethren may be able to devote themselves better to contemplation and study,
that the intimacy of their religious family may be increased, and that the authenticity and
character of our religious life may be revealed, the cloister must be observed in our
convents.
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| * 42. | All the brethren need the superior's permission for leaving the convent which can be
granted in a general manner for a specific reason.
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| * 43. | A brother always needs the permission of the competent superior to make a journey.
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| * 44. | I. Permission for a long journey should ordinarily be given in writing with the
destination, purpose, and duration stated; a priest should also have a testimonial
letter from his superior.
II. Within the limits designated by the prior provincial, a local superior can give
permission for traveling.
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| * 45. | I. A brother who is going to spend some time in the territory of another province
should notify the proper prior provincial in advance, n. 137 always being observed.
II. When traveling, a brother should frequent our own convents wherever we have
them, in so far as possible.
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| 46. | I. Silence shall be diligently observed by the brethren, especially in places and at
times reserved for prayer and study; it is the guardian of all observance and
contributes particularly to interior religious life, to peace, prayer, the study of
truth, and the sincerity of preaching.
II. Silence must be regulated in a spirit of charity in such a way that it does not hinder
productive communication.
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| * 47. | [This Ordination about silence at meals has been abrogated.] (MA-148; QC-265)
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| * 48. | Determinations about silence regarding time and place shall be made by provincial and
conventual chapters according to the tradition of the Order.
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| * 49. | I. The brethren's food should be simple but sufficient for their needs.
II. All the brethren not legitimately impeded should eat at the common table. III. Besides the prescriptions of competent ecclesiastical authority, a provincial
chapter, attentive to the Order's tradition, shall determine the forms and times of
fast and abstinence; the conventual chapter shall determine the penances of the
local community, especially during the season of Lent.
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| 50. | The habit of the Order consists of a white tunic with a white scapular and capuce, with a
black cappa and capuce, a leather belt and rosary (see Appendix n. 3).
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| * 51. | The brethren should wear the habit of the Order in our convents as a sign of our
consecration, unless for a just cause the prior provincial shall have determined
otherwise. Outside the convent, ecclesiastical laws being observed, the direction of the
prior provincial shall be followed.
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| 52. | I. By their religious consecration and apostolic vocation, the brethren are urged more
than the rest of the faithful to deny themselves, take up their cross, and to proclaim
in body and soul the death of Jesus, and thus they shall gain for themselves and for
others the glory of the resurrection.
II. In imitation of St. Dominic, "who while he lived in the flesh walked in the spirit,
not merely refusing to satisfy the desires of the flesh, but destroying them,"(18) the
brethren should practice the virtue of penance especially by carrying out faithfully
everything that pertains to our life.
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| * 53. | I. It is the task of provincial and conventual chapters, allowing for the different
circumstances of places and people, to prescribe new forms of penance derived
from a contemporary mode of living, especially for the seasons of Advent and
Lent.
II. Each brother should also add other works of mortification to discharge more fully
the duty of penance.
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| 54. | To foster regular observance and a healthy reform of the brethren, corrections can be
given by superiors, moderators of the centers for institutional studies, and masters of the
brethren in basic formation.
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| * 55. | I. The seriousness of a transgression shall be judged mainly by the injury to the
common good and not according to the sin that may be involved.
II. The principal forms of penance are: to perform certain spiritual exercises, to undergo certain forms of mortification or deprivation, to do certain works useful for the community. Chapter II
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| 56. | The brethren shall follow the example of St. Dominic, who both at home and on the
road, day and night, was diligent in the divine office and in prayer and celebrated the
divine mysteries with great devotion.
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| 57. | According to the desire of St. Dominic, the solemn and common celebration of the
liturgy must be maintained among the principal duties of our vocation.
In the liturgy, especially in the Eucharist, the mystery of salvation is present and at work which the brethren share and contemplate and even proclaim in preaching to others so that they may be incorporated into Christ through the sacraments of faith. In the liturgy, together with Christ, the brethren glorify God for the eternal plan of his
will and for the wonderful order of grace, and they intercede with the Father of mercies
for the whole Church as well as for the needs and the salvation of the whole world.
Therefore, the celebration of the liturgy is the center and heart of our whole life, whose
unity especially is rooted in it.
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| 58. | The brethren shall celebrate conventual Mass and the Liturgy of the Hours publicly, and
since the liturgy is an action of the whole people of God, the participation of the faithful
in our celebrations must be encouraged.
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| 59. | I. Celebration of the conventual Mass is the center of community liturgy. For the
memorial of the death and resurrection of the Lord is the bond of fraternal charity
and the primary source of apostolic strength.
II. For this reason it is preferable that the conventual Mass be concelebrated, because in this way the unity both of the priestly ministry and of the community is more properly signified. III. The daily celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice is recommended for all priests because, even if the faithful are not present, it is an action of Christ and of the Church. IV. The brethren who are not priests should participate in Mass daily.
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| 60. | To foster the conversion of one's entire life by the virtue of penance, the brethren should
receive sacramental confession frequently.
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| 61. | I. In our communities the conventual Mass and Liturgy of the Hours shall be
celebrated daily in choir.
II. Where because of a legitimate impediment the common celebration of the conventual Mass and the whole office cannot be held, at least Lauds and Vespers should be celebrated. If this situation is habitual, it should be acknowledged by the prior provincial with his council. III. When, for a just cause, the Liturgy of the Hours cannot be celebrated in choir, it
shall be carried out in another suitable location especially so that the faithful may
be able to participate actively in the liturgical prayer of the brethren.
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| 62. | I. Taking into account the circumstances of apostolic life, the order of the hours shall
be so arranged in every community that through their celebration the different
times of day will be truly sanctified.
II. Lauds as morning prayer and Vespers as evening prayer are the twofold hinge of
the daily office; they are to be regarded as the principal hours and celebrated as
such.
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| 63. | All brothers are bound to the celebration of conventual Mass and Liturgy of the Hours
in choir. Everyone shall be mindful of this common obligation. Those, however, who
cannot be present at the community celebration, shall say the Liturgy of the Hours
privately if they are solemnly professed. They shall say at least Lauds and Vespers
privately if they are simply professed.
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| * 64. | [This Ordination about cooperator brothers substituting the rosary for divine office has been abrogated.] (QC-273; W-190)
65. It is fitting that at least some part of the divine office should be sung, especially those parts which of their very nature distinctly require music. Our celebrations, however, should be characterized by simplicity and moderation. |
| 66. | I. Since the contemplation of divine things and intimate conversation and friendship
with God are to be sought not only in liturgical celebrations and in reading
Scripture but also in diligent private prayer, the brethren shall zealously cultivate
this type of prayer.
II. All the brethren are to spend at least half an hour in mental prayer at a time to be
determined by the conventual chapter and, in so far as possible, in common.
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| 67. | I. The brethren are to worship Christ in the Eucharistic mystery so that from this
wonderful relationship they may derive an increase of faith, hope, and charity.
II. The traditional devotion in the Order to the Virgin Mother of God, Queen of Apostles as well as an example of meditation on the words of Christ and of obedience in one's own mission, should be cherished by the brethren. They shall recite daily a third part of the rosary in common or in private, according to the determination of a provincial chapter and maintaining suitable harmony with the liturgy. This form of praying leads us to contemplation of the mystery of salvation in which the Virgin Mary is intimately associated with the work of her Son. III. The brethren shall foster true devotion and veneration toward St. Dominic, the
mirror of our life, and for the saints of the Order that they may be moved to imitate
them and may be strengthened in the spirit of their vocation.
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| 68. | Each year all the brethren shall spend six full days in spiritual exercises, pondering the
word of God in their heart and praying more earnestly.
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| * 69. | The prayers to be said at meals shall be determined by a provincial chapter or by theprior provincial with the consent of his council.
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| 70. | I. From All Souls' Day to Advent, every priest shall celebrate one Mass and brothers
who are not priests shall participate in one Mass for deceased brothers, sisters,
familiars, and benefactors.
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| * 71. | I. In every convent properly so called, the conventual Mass shall be celebrated for
the deceased mentioned above once a week. In this Mass, the prayer of the faithful
with petitions for the dead shall be said. However, where the conventual Mass
cannot be said (see n. 61, II), one Mass shall be applied for the dead.
II. Exceptions from this directive are: Holy Week, Easter Week, the week in which Christmas occurs, as well as weeks in which Mass for the Dead is celebrated whether because of an anniversary (n.70, II), the death of a brother (n.73), or of a Pope (n.74.). III. Once a week a third part of the rosary shall be recited by all the brethren for the
deceased mentioned above.
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| * 72. | At least once a day, the psalm De profundis shall be recited in common by the brethren for deceased brethren and benefactors.
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| * 73. | On the death of a brother:
I. The convent where he dies and the convent to which he was assigned shall celebrate for him the Office and Mass for the Dead. II. In the whole province of his affiliation:
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| * 74. | On the death of a Pope, each convent shall celebrate a Mass for the Dead.
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| * 75. | Besides the suffrages listed above, others can be prescribed by a provincial chapter.
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| 76. | St. Dominic included study, ordained to the ministry of salvation, as an essential part of
his plan for the Order: in this was no small innovation.(19) He, who himself always
carried with him the Gospel of St. Matthew and the Epistles of Saint Paul,(20) directed the
brethren to schools,(21) and sent them to the major cities "so that they might study,
preach, and establish a convent."(22)
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| 77. | I. Hence "before all else, our study should aim principally and ardently at this that we
might be able to be useful to the souls of our neighbors."(23)
II. By study the brethren consider in their heart the manifold wisdom of God and prepare themselves for the doctrinal service of the Church and of all mankind. It is all the more fitting that they should devote themselves to study, because from the tradition of the Order they are more specially called to cultivate mankind's inclination toward truth. III. Study of this kind must be pursued according to the different requirements of each
subject; it requires strict discipline and the application of all one's abilities.
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| 78. | The light and source of our study is God, who spoke in former times and in different
ways, and last of all speaks in Christ, through whom the mystery of the Father's will,
after the sending of the Spirit, is fully revealed in the Church and enlightens the minds of
all people.
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| 79. | The brethren should contemplate and study divine revelation of which Sacred Scripture
and Tradition constitute a single sacred deposit, and from the perennial instructional
value of its overall plan, they should learn to discover the many paths of gospel truth,
even in created things, in human works and institutions, as well as in different religions.
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| 80. | In all things the brethren should think with the Church and exhibit allegiance to the
varied exercise of the Magisterium to which is entrusted the authentic interpretation of
the word of God. Furthermore, faithful to the Order's mission, they should always be
prepared to provide with special dedication cooperative service to the Magisterium in
fulfilling their doctrinal obligations.
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| 81. | The brethren should study attentively the writings of the Fathers of the Church and
distinguished witnesses of Christian thought who, with the help of different cultures and
the wisdom of the philosophers, labored to understand the word of God more fully.
Following their thinking, the brethren should respectfully listen to the living tradition of
the Church, seek dialogue with the learned, and open their mind to contemporary
discoveries and problems.
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| 82. | The best teacher and model in fulfilling this duty is St. Thomas, whose teaching the
Church commends in a unique way and the Order receives as a patrimony which
exercises an enriching influence on the intellectual life of the brethren and confers on the
Order a special character.
Consequently, the brethren should develop a genuine familiarity with his writings and
thought, and, according to the needs of the time and with legitimate freedom, they
should renew and enrich his teaching with the continually fresh riches of sacred and
human wisdom.
|
| 83. | Continuous study nourishes contemplation, encourages fulfillment of the counsels with
shining fidelity, constitutes a form of asceticism by its own perseverance and difficulty,
and, as an essential element of our whole life, it is an excellent religious observance.
Art. II -- On the Promotion of Study
|
| 84. | The brethren should apply themselves to study with perseverance and in promoting
study they should recognize that they are all colleagues and under obligation to one
another; such mutual collaboration will become more effective if it is organized by
appropriate structures.
|
| * 85. | I. The brethren should cultivate the sciences, especially the sacred sciences, not only for preparing immediately for ministry but for their own cultural development.
II. For achieving this purpose it is necessary to set aside certain periods at stated
times reserved for more intensive study.
|
| * 86. | I. Because of the continual advance in culture and the complexity of its problems, it is necessary that some brothers, especially professors, be assigned to higher studies
either in centers of the Order or in other centers.
II. These brothers should have suitable conditions for working with experts in their own and allied disciplines, and they should enjoy reasonable freedom for research, discussion, and communication in fidelity to the Order and the Church. III. If doctrinal difficulties arise, and the controversy is not settled, brothers shall be
heard by superiors with the help of experts designated by each party and
acceptable to each party, always saving the right of recourse to higher superiors.
|
| 87. | I. Superiors shall value study highly and promote it earnestly, and they should see to
it that all the brethren have the means and opportunity for study.
|
| * 88. | It is especially the responsibility of the conventual prior to:
|
| 89. | I. It pertains principally to the prior provincial:
IV. An analogous method for promoting studies shall be established for the vicariates
of a province in their statutes.
|
| * 90. | I. It pertains principally to the Master of the Order:
|
| 91. | I. Although the intellectual life should flourish in every convent, nevertheless there
should be centers where the brethren can dedicate themselves to study in a special
manner.
II. A center of studies in the Order is a community of brothers who apply themselves to study full time and in a stable manner; it shall be established with at least three brothers endowed with the necessary qualifications; it shall be furnished with a suitable library and other work aids, as well as with stable economic resources. III. A center can be a part of another community, namely, a conventual community. It can count among its members brothers from other convents. IV. The rights and obligations of any center of studies of a province, and even the manner in which it is governed, are to be included in the Ratio Studiorum Particularis of the province and approved with it. V. Centers of studies of the Order should be esteemed for truly scientific value and
should maintain relationships with similar institutions and the university world of
the region.
|
| 92. | Among the centers of studies which should exist in a province, these are the principal
ones:
|
| 92. bis. | I. The moderator of any center of studies of a province is appointed in the
manner to be determined by provincial statute.
II. The council of moderators or the body of major officials of each center is determined according to the statutes of each center, with due regard for the provisions of paragraph I. III. The relationship between the council of moderators of any center and
the regent of studies in his role as head of the commission on the
intellectual life of the province is determined in the Ratio Particularis
of studies of the province.
|
| 93. | I. In every province there shall be a regent of studies who shall, under the authority
of the prior provincial and with the advice of the commission for the intellectual
life of the province, according to the statutes of the province:
|
| * 93. bis. | I. To establish or accept a center of higher studies as well as a university, besides
observing the requirements of law and fulfilling academic conditions, it is
necessary that:
III. Approval of the prior provincial and his council, given upon the advice
of the commission for intellectual life of the province, is required to
establish a center for special studies or a center for permanent
formation. (A-201):
|
| * 94. | I. Scientific degrees in the Order are:
|
| * 95. | The examination for the lectorate shall be made according to the procedure and
conditions determined in the general and particular Rationes Studiorum.
|
| * 96. | The masterate in sacred theology is conferred on those brethren who are recognized as
eminent in promoting the sciences, especially the Sacred Sciences.
Excellence of this kind is established by an ability for stimulating and leading doctrinal
reflection and research as well as by published works of outstanding value and by
significant status gained in a scientific field even outside the Order.
|
| * 97. | I. For anyone to be promoted to the masterate in sacred theology, it is required:
|
| 98. | Following the example of St. Dominic, who was most desirous of the salvation of all
men and of all nations, the brethren should realize that they have been sent to all men,
groups, and nations, believers and unbelievers, and especially to the poor. They should
focus their attention on preaching the gospel and establishing the Church among the
nations, and on explaining and strengthening the faith in the Christian people.
|
| 99. | I. The ministry of the word is a participation in the prophetic office of the body of
bishops and thus preachers must first accept the whole gospel and seek a living
understanding of the mystery of salvation as it is handed down and explained by
the Church. Dominican preaching should always be marked by an evangelical
spirit and by sound doctrine.
II. That the salvific influence of our preaching can reach everyone, it is necessary not only to consider the circumstances and aspirations of those whom we address but also to establish a living relationship with them so that the updated preaching of the revealed word, the law of all evangelization, may endure especially among those who are far from the faith. Thus our mind is opened at the same time to the spirit of God and to the hearts of those to whom the word is preached so that it receives a communication of the light of the Paraclete, as well as of his love and strength. Consequently, the brethren should learn to recognize the Spirit working in the midst of the people of God, and to perceive the treasures hidden in the various forms of human culture, by which human nature is more fully revealed, and new paths are opened to truth. III. The brethren should strive to develop their spiritual life and human virtues, lest by
their conduct they refute what they preach.
|
| 100. | I. The ministry of preaching is a communitarian task, and it pertains primarily to the
whole community; thus, in the beginning of the Order a convent was called
"Sacred Preaching" (sacra praedicatio).
II. The cooperator brothers have a role in the apostolate of the whole community not only by their work of providing for the needs of the convent but also by a ministry properly so called both by working with the priests and by engaging in their own apostolic activity according to their talents. III. The superior together with the brethren should ponder and accept this common duty of preaching so that the whole community becomes responsible for it; the right of the superior shall be maintained, however, of deciding upon and accepting any particular ministry. IV. In fraternal conferences, the brethren should discuss among themselves their
apostolic experiences and difficulties so that they can submit them to common
study and, with the combined resources in these special groups, they may be able
to exercise their ministry more effectively.
|
| * 101. | I. Wherever the brethren exercise the ministry they should cooperate with the
bishops in planning the apostolate whether on the diocesan or national level.
II. Collaboration with other priests and religious is strongly recommended, especially in those matters which pertain more to our charism so that the works of our apostolate and that of others mutually complement each other in the common service of the Church. III. Since the laity by reason of baptism and confirmation are deputed to the apostolate, we must strive with them to make the Church present and lasting in all areas of society as the sacrament of salvation. IV. Finally, seeing in all men of good will the image of God the creator and the hope of salvation, the brethren must not hesitate to collaborate with them, even though they still cannot proclaim the Gospel to them. They should study the human virtues and the methods of discussion and dialogue
which in a special way are required for cooperation with individuals of another
persuasion.
|
| 102. | To teach sacred doctrine by word and by writing and the other disciplines which
promote the spread of the faith and its understanding pertains essentially to the
Dominican vocation.
|
| * 103. | I. The brethren should be involved in universities, institutes, and scientific centers as
well as in schools of a different type and level whether they belong to us or to
others, especially as professors and as religious assistants.
II. Specially prepared brethren should endeavor to collaborate with experts in the
various sciences both by taking part in their research and by seeking ways of
communicating with them the truth of the Gospel, so that the advance of culture
may lead to a clearer perception of the human vocation and may inspire souls to a
deeper understanding of the faith.
|
| * 104. | To spread the truth and to inform public opinion properly, the brethren with a special
talent who have been provided with training should zealously use the instruments of
social communication (mass media).
|
| 105. | I. The ministry of the word, in whatever form it may be exercised, is intimately
connected with the sacraments and is brought to perfection in them. For the
Christian life is born, nourished, and strengthened by the word and the sacraments.
The faithful, therefore, are to be instructed about them so that they may be able to
understand them as signs and may be properly disposed to receive them.
II. Since the Eucharist is the center of the Church's life, and the source and summit of all evangelization, the brethren, eagerly contemplating the grace of this great mystery, should strive to ponder its importance for their own salvation and that of others and its power and richness as well as to urge the faithful to participate frequently, actively, and reverently, in the breaking of bread. III. The sacrament of penance and its administration are intimately connected with the ministry of the word because the conversion of heart which preaching seeks to inspire is brought to perfection by pardon and reconciliation with God and the Church and, furthermore, because it leads harmoniously to the enlightenment and formation of conscience as well as to growth in gospel spirituality. The brethren, therefore, should prove themselves always ready and willing for the fruitful administration of the sacrament of penance. In exercising this ministry they should be attentive to the development of the sciences about human nature as well as the particular circumstances and sensitivities of each of the faithful. For a similar reason, they should have high regard for education for Christian living. |
| 106. | I. The brethren must cultivate preaching in any form whatsoever. However, in
determining the order of priority in ministry, they must consider the needs of the
Church made known by her voice and by the signs of the times, which they are
bound to support by their distinctive vocation.
II. Therefore, they should choose those forms in preference to others which serve better the promotion of the faith whether among non-believers, or in human areas which are developing outside the faith, or among believers to strengthen and perfect their faith. III. With this norm in mind, it pertains to a province to determine according to local needs and available resources, the more important objectives for the brethren's ministry, and periodically to make a critical review of the obligations which burden the apostolate. IV. It is the task of the Master of the Order and his council to sustain cooperation
between provinces for pursuing ministerial priorities appropriately especially when
the matters to be treated have international importance both in the religious and in
the social order.
|
| * 107. | A province or vicariate shall draw up a plan of its total apostolate and prepare the
brothers for this, and it shall arrange an ordering of its resources on the basis of unity,
strength, and apostolic continuity. This planning shall take into account the actual needs
of the Church and of the same province or vicariate as well as a projection of problems
in the future.
|
| 108. | I. The mission of the Friars Preachers in the service of the Church, namely, to preach
the name of Jesus Christ to the nations, is the duty of the entire Order. This work
is carried out in various ways according to the different conditions either of the
Church or of the countries, groups, and people to whom it is directed. However,
it is always to be done according to the fundamental principles of the ministry of
the word and in a manner befitting the charism of the Order.
II. Missionary activity should aim toward having the missionary, by the evangelical witness of his life and preaching, make present the magnetic power of the Gospel of Christ as the true basis of salvation, and thus bring together the people of God by cooperating in the liberation and reconciliation of mankind. The missionary shall organize his activity for building up the Church in the
countries or regions where it has not yet taken root and for reviving the faith and
christian life in areas where the Church has suffered a setback, in such a way that
he shall always regard himself in the service of the local Church.
|
| * 109. | I. The brethren should be particularly concerned about the religious and human
problems of the poor and of the working class, especially of those who are far
from the faith.
II. Provinces should search for and establish those forms of life and of preaching
through which the apostolate can respond more suitably to the objective needs of
these people.
|
| * 110. | Among the changes affecting christian life, especially from the advance of the sciences,
the arts, or human culture, the brethren should try particularly to discern those values
which provide pathways toward a more vivid perception of God and to concentrate on
solving the problems this evolution has stirred up in people's minds so that the preaching
of the Gospel can generate a purer and more mature commitment to the faith.
|
| * 111. | The brethren shall always be prompt to initiate or pursue discussions or
opportunities for true dialogue with followers of other religions or with
non-believers. (O-218; MC-257) They should remember, however, that special
preparation is clearly needed to meet the problems arising from such activity.
|
| * 112. | Superiors shall be more concerned about establishing convents in the missions than
about retaining territories so that the brethren, with the greatest liberty according to the
proper charism of the Order, can apply themselves to the ministry of the word.
|
| * 113. | I. The care of the missions pertains to the whole Order; therefore, every brother
should help the missions in whatever way he can. It pertains to the Master of the
Order, in collaboration with the provinces concerned, to supply help, so that the
brethren of one or of several provinces may be sent to the service of local
churches.
II. Our missionary activity is governed:
|
| * 114. | I. To carry out missionary activities more fully and effectively, fraternal cooperation
between provinces working in the same territories should be fostered.
II. There should also be a collaboration of all the provinces in the total missionary activity of the Order, so that provincials should willingly offer suitable brothers for pursuing this common endeavor. III. In administering the affairs of the missions, the Master of the Order shall be aided
by the assistant designated for matters pertaining to the apostolate.
|
| * 115. | Those should be chosen for missionary work who have already given signs of a
missionary vocation and are well prepared for pursuing it. Special training for
missionaries, both clerics and cooperators, should be given in a convent of the missions
or in a specialized institute where they can learn the vernacular language, customs,
history, culture, and pastoral aspects of the people.
|
| * 116. | [This Ordination about diversity and harmony in missionary activities has been
abrogated.] (T-55)
|
| * 117. | Our missionaries should keep in mind that the purpose of the missions is aimed at
forming communities of the faithful and at enabling them to provide for their own needs
as soon as possible. They should see to it, therefore, that a particular church is provided
with a sufficient number of local priests, religious, and laity and has the ministries and
institutions that are necessary to lead and develop a christian life under their own bishop.
|
| * 118. | Since religious life is a distinctive sign of the heavenly kingdom and, through a more
intimate consecration to God made in the Church, manifests clearly and also signifies the
interior nature of the christian vocation, our missionaries should diligently promote the
religious life under native forms from the initial foundation of the Church.
|
| * 119. | I. As far as possible our missionaries should establish regular life and strive to live in
full community.
II. To this end, a convent should be established as soon as possible in which Dominican life should be represented according to the needs, ability, and special quality of the people evangelized so that it may truly be seen as something indigenous and not foreign to their country. Ascetical and contemplative traditions whose seeds were often sown by God in ancient cultures even before the preaching of the Gospel should be adopted in so far as they correspond to Dominican life. III. Dominican vocations should be promoted as soon as possible so that the Order
may be firmly established and a native province can be founded and can endure.
|
| * 120. | A province established in missionary territory should demonstrate a missionary spirit, so
that it not only makes its own countrymen sharers of the gospel message, but also
strives to preach it to other nations.
|
| * 121. | Research centers shall be set up in which the religious and socio-cultural heritage of
countries shall be carefully studied and those elements that are compatible shall be
synthesized into Catholic unity. These centers are particularly consonant with the
special apostolate of the Order and should be promoted principally with the assistance of
the different provinces.
|
| * 122. | With special care the brethren should promote the education of children and youths
because this contributes greatly among developing nations to raising the level of human
dignity and to preparing for more humane conditions of life.
|
| * 123. | To promote unity among all Christians, the brethren shall be attentive to fostering an
ecumenical spirit among Catholics and entering into true and sincere dialogue with
non-Catholics so that the scandal of division may be avoided and cooperation in social
and technical matters, as well as in cultural and religious, may be established.
|
| 124. | I. By their preaching, the brethren should lead Christians gradually to maturity and
responsibility in the faith so that the Church may be renewed and strengthened in
its witness to the Gospel.
II. The brethren should give special attention to the homily and other forms of
preaching which, closely connected with the liturgical action and with the
sacraments, should penetrate the life of the faithful more deeply.
|
| * 125. | The brethren should provide special spiritual and doctrinal assistance to priests,
religious, and others to whom the task of educating people in the faith is entrusted.
|
| * 126. | Our churches should be centers of preaching, liturgical life, Christian community, and
apostolic inspiration.
|
| * 127. | Since the apostolate of the Order in many places is carried out effectively in parishes, the
brethren to whom this charge is entrusted should devote themselves to this work
with great diligence, especially through the ministry of the word.
|
| * 128. | I. Superiors should see to it that a convent to which a parish is entrusted or united
has the necessary conditions and a sufficient number of the brethren to combine
properly parochial ministry with conventual life.
II. The number of parishes in each province should be regulated in such a way that there remains a sufficient number of the brethren who can be available more fully and more freely for other ministries of the word of God. III. The competent superior for accepting a parish is the prior provincial with the
consent of his council unless the provincial chapter shall have determined to
reserve this faculty to itself. (T-58) or the council of a vicariate with the
approval of the provincial council.(A-203)
|
| 129. | Since the Marian rosary is a way to contemplate the mysteries of Christ and a school for
developing evangelical life, it should be regarded as a form of preaching appropriate for
the Order in which the teaching of the faith is conveyed in the light of the Blessed Virgin
Mary's participation in the mystery of Christ and of the Church.
Therefore, the brethren should preach the use of the rosary fervently which is to be
considered a characteristic mark of the Order, and promote its associations so that it
may become more vital each day.
|
| * 130. | I. As heralds of the Gospel of Christ, the brethren, aware of their great responsibility
for the unity of the people of God, should endeavor to foster an ecumenical spirit
among Catholics, so that the work of reconciliation may always continue to
develop.
II. Theological research on ecumenical questions is of distinct importance, and the brethren equipped with the proper scientific competence should promote ecumenical work in sincere collaboration with other expert theologians and institutes. of our Ministry |
| * 131. | The task of preaching the kingdom of heaven, which has already been begun by the
Incarnation of the Word of God and tends toward the restoration of all things in Christ,
urges us to promote the right order of society.
|
| * 132. | I. It is particularly important to enlighten and arouse the conscience of the people of
God about all the requirements of their place in human society so that their
resources may be joined together in a common effort and undertaking with all men
of good will to establish on earth the kingdom of justice, of brotherly love, and of
peace.
II. To achieve this, it is necessary especially to assist with the formation of the laity
and to recognize and foster their proper mission and activity in building modern
society.
|
| * 133. | The brethren, together with experts in the various social fields, should diligently engage
in a study of the human and moral problems which always arise in changing conditions
and give close attention to the theological aspects of these questions.
|
| * 134. | In its social aspect, our apostolate should be and should be seen to be a true servant of
mankind confirmed by efforts and measures undertaken on their behalf and marked
principally by full evangelical freedom independent especially from any faction.
|
| * 135. | [This Ordination on the position of Preacher General in the Order has been abrogated.]
for Publishing |
| * 136. | The brethren shall have proper faculties for preaching and hearing confessions. (Can.
764, 765, 966 and following)
|
| * 137. | The brethren shall not preach within the boundaries of another province without the
previous consent of its prior provincial, given at least habitually.
|
| * 138. | The brethren approved in the Order's examination for hearing confessions, by the very
fact of their approval given in writing by the examiners, have delegated jurisdiction over
persons subject to the Order, except nuns, and over others living day and night in our
houses. (Can. 967-969)
|
| * 139. | The brethren shall keep ever in mind the fact that their public statements (in books,
newspapers, radio, and television) reflect not only on themselves but on their brothers,
the Order, and the Church. For this reason, they should be particularly attentive to
developing a sense of dialogue and mutual responsibility with their brothers and with
their superiors in arriving at an opinion. They should pay special attention to this critical
dialogue with major superiors if their statements or writings deal with disputed matters
of some importance.
|
| 139. bis. | I. The brethren need the permission in writing of their major superior to publish
books.
II. If the major superior has doubts about giving permission on account of problems concerning faith or morals, he should appoint a commission of three experts to study the work. III. If the major superior does not grant permission, he ought to communicate the reason to the author. IV. An author who has been denied permission by a major superior can have
recourse to the Master of the Order. In this situation the Master shall appoint
a commission to examine the text. The judgment of the Master of the Order
is considered definitive
|
| * 140. | When a book has been published, one copy shall be sent to the archives of the Order,
and another to the archives of the province.
OTHER GROUPS OF THE ORDER AND TO ASSOCIATIONS |
| 141. | All the groups composing the Dominican family (see n.1, IX), share its common
vocation, and each in its own special way serves the mission of the Order in the world.
|
| 142. | The nuns of the Order, according to the plan of St. Dominic, dedicate themselves totally
in their contemplative religious life to communion with God, whereby the apostolic life
of the brethren as well as of the other groups of the Dominican family is nourished while
the nuns provide a witness of prayer, silence, and penance.
|
| * 143. | The close spiritual communion of the nuns with the brethren is strengthened by a juridic
bond by which the nuns are united with the Order in the manner prescribed in their own
constitutions.
|
| 144. | Imbued with the spirit and zeal of Saint Dominic, the sisters give witness to the gospel in
word and in work, joined with the brethren in close communion in building up the
people of God.
|
| * 145. | Therefore, the brethren and the sisters should establish collaboration and apostolic
planning together.
|
| * 146. | With fraternal concern our superiors should provide the nuns and sisters every kind of
assistance; the brethren, according to the arrangement of the superiors, should willingly
minister to them in doctrinal, sacramental, and pastoral service.
|
| 147. | The members of secular institutes, which are affiliated with the Order, embrace
profession of the evangelical counsels in the world according to the spirit of St.
Dominic.
|
| * 148. | The brethren should encourage the perfection of the members and the growth of their
institutes and establish fraternal collaboration with them so that they may be able to
carry out a fruitful apostolate in the world.
|
| 149. | I. Lay fraternities of the Order are associations of lay people who, joined together by
a special gift of God in the apostolic spirit of St. Dominic, "aim to achieve their
salvation and that of others" by profession of the evangelical life according to the
form of living in the world adapted by the Order and formally approved for their
state of life.
II. There are also fraternities of priests who strive to develop their life and ministry in the spirit of St. Dominic.
|
| * 150. | The brethren should take particular care to encourage these fraternities and to establish
mutual collaboration with them, so that the ministry of the Order may be more fully
carried out in different areas of both the Church and the world.
|
| * 151. | The organization and government of these fraternities shall be determined in their rule.
|
| 152. | The associations attached to the Order, by fostering the renewal of Christian life in the
people of God, serve the spiritual welfare of the faithful and, at the same time, provide
the Order with collaboration in some particular apostolate. (See Appendix n. 4.)
|
| * 153. | Therefore the brethren, according to the circumstances of time and place, should promote the confraternities of the Order, especially of the Most Holy Name of Jesus and of the Most Holy Rosary, and our other associations, so that they may be of benefit to the faithful. Their own statutes shall be retained for their organization and government. |
1. Humbert of Romans, Commentary on the Rule, XVI (Opera de vita regulari, ed. Berthier, I, p. 72.2. Process of Canonization, MOPH, XVI, p. 178, n.3.
3. Vatican II, Const. Lumen Gentium, n. 51.
4. Primitive Constitutions, Dist. I, c. 14.
5. Process of Canonization, MOPH, XVI, p. 151, n. 33.
6. Jordan of Saxony, Libellus, MOPH, XVI, p. 46, n. 41.
7. Primitive Constitutions, Dist, I, c. 13.
8. Process of Canonization, MOPH, XVI, p. 127, n. 6; p. 150, n. 32; p. 163, n. 43; p. 142, n. 24; p. 143, n. 25; p. 166, n. 48.
9. Jordan of Saxony, Libellus, MOPH XVI, p. 74, n. 103
10. Ibid.
11. St. Gregory, Moralia, XXXV, P.L. 76, c. 765, in St. Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, II-II, q. 104, a. a1.
12. Rule of St. Augustine.
13. Jordan of Saxony, Libellus, MOPH, XVI, p. 76, n. 107.
14. Matt. 19:21.
15. 2 Cor. 8:9.
16. Rule of St. Augustine.
17. Primitive Constitutions, Dist. II, c. 31.
18. Encyclical Letter of Blessed Jordan of Saxony, 1223, AFP 22 [1952], p. 183.
19. Primitive Constitutions, Prologue.
20. Process of Canonization, MOPH XVI, p. 147, n. 29.
21. Humbert of Romans, Legend of St. Dominic, MOPH XVI, p. 400, n. 40.
22. Process of Canonization, MOPH XVI, p. 143-144, n. 26; ee Jordan of Saxony, Libellus, MOPH XVI, p. 50, n. 51.
23. Primitive Constitutions, Prologue.
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